New Buckenham Common and recent moths, 21 May 2020

I met up with Jus at New Buckenham Common yesterday evening for a social-distanced couple of hours. We'd nt seen each other since lockdown began so it was great to have a catch-up whilst gawping at the thousands of Green-winged Orchids. Again, a reasonable variety of colour forms but no pure 'alba' specimens despite a really pale one looking good from a distance! We also had a very welcome Turtle Dove there plus a singing Lesser Whitethroat and strangely a calling Tawny Owl in bright sunlight at c18.10 with the temperature still high! We also amused ourselves checking various other wildflowers on the way back to the carpark. Hedge Mustard was a new one for me as was a Lesser Trefoil in my parents garden while delivering their shopping earlier in the day.





 Green-winged Orchids

With the continued good weather I've had my moth trap out fo r the last 3 nights with some reasonably pleasing results.  In addition to those photographed below I've had Pale Tussock,  Red Twin-spot Carpet, Light Emerald, Cinnabar, Marbled Minor agg, Waved Umber, Brown Rustic, Mottled Rustic and Common Marbled Carpet amongst the commoner more numerous species. 

Buff-tip

Bird Wing

Lychnis

Maiden's Blush

Poplar Grey

Poplar Hawkmoth

Red-green Carpet

Swallow Prominent

Treble Lines

        White Ermine

A new local site for Early Purple Orchid, 18 May 2020

After a work call to a lady in Diss yesterday I stopped by a Roadside Nature Reserve just outside Burston on the way home. I'd heard from another customer who lives nearby that it had 'orchids' but which species? The mystery was quickly solved  - they are Early Purple Orchids. I counted 13 spikes on the verge but all except 2 were completely gone over. Also there I identified Black Bryony, a common plant but nonetheless a new one for me! There was also plenty of Sulphur Clover yet to come in to flower.

Early Purple Orchid

  Black Bryony

Some Weekend Freedom, 16 & 17 May 2020

With lockdown measures having been eased slightly we were able to get out and about a little this weekend actually using the car.

On Saturday we stayed fairly local, just visiting Chippenhall Green near Fressingfield. This is one of the ancient meadow sites for Green-winged Orchids and a good wander all over the green revealed loads as usual. There were quite a few that were going over and/or showing signs of frost damage but the variety was pretty good. Not quite the marvellous variety we get at nearby Winks Meadow but after a lot of searching I did find one pure 'alba' specimen. While Belinda was occupied by the local grazing horses I walked around and was delighted to find 2 singing Turtle Doves, one of which I managed to get a view of. Yellowhammer and Common Whitethroat were also in song. We returned to the car to find our way blocked by the over-friendly horses. It took a while to usher them away while one was enjoying scratching its arse on our wing mirror!

On the way back we stopped for a walk at Weybread, concentrating on the south west area behind Wharton's nursery. A Reed Warbler (yeartick) was singing beside Kingfisher Pit and a patch tick Red Kite glided over mobbed by the local Oystercatchers. New plants id'd there included Rough Chervil, Field Madder, White Bryony, Wild Cherry and Hounds-tongue.






Green-winged Orchids

Field Madder

White Bryony

 Hounds-tongue

Sunday dawned bright so we decided to head for the coast to actually see the sea for the first time for a long time! We took a packed lunch and did a long walk through Dunwich Forest, over Dingle Hill to the beach and then back through the middle of Westwood Marshes. It felt so good to be on the coast again - helped almost immediately we left the car with a showy singing Firerest in Dunwich Forest. The whole was gave me a few new birds for the year - 2 Sandwich Terns, Sand Martins and Sedge Warblers plus c4 Cetti's Warblers, a couple of Reed Warblers, Garden Warbler, numerous pinging Bearded Tits and a fantastic Hobby hawking over the reedbed. To top it off, at the end of the walk a Nightingale sang briefly twice and another 2 Firecrests were singing strongly. A pond in the forest held a male Broad-bodied Chaser, Large Red Damselflies and Hairy Dragonfly. The latter proved to be out in good numbers on the marshes later in the walk. There was plenty of botanical interest too with Three-nerved Sandwort, Mouse-ear Hawkweed, White Ramping Fumitory, Danish Scurvy-grass, Meadow Horsetail, Birdsfoot Trefoil and Sea Kale in flower plus Sea Pea, Yellow-horned Poppy and Beet yet to come.

Mouse-ear Hawkweed

Danish Scurvy-grass

 Three-nerved Sandwort

              

'You ain't seen me right?' 5 May 2020

A quick, dirty and unforgiveable 😉venture to a wood in darkest Suffolk to see one of the rarest and most range-restricted plants in the UK - Suffolk Lungwort.
Known from only 3 woods I managed to quickly visit one, mostly using public footpaths. My quarry was quickly found and luckily I wasn't! I took a few photos but didn't linger despite the wood being absolutely chock full of aromatic Ramsons, Bluebells and no small number of Early Purple Orchids.
On the walk back I found a nice Blue Shieldbug beside a pond that held loads of Water Crowfoot and also had my first Common Vetch of the year in flower.




Suffolk Lungwort

Blue Shieldbug

  Common Vetch

Flora Flora Flora, 5 May 2020

My lockdown experience has been broken up by some work in the last couple of weeks (only outside painting obviously!) which has limited any local natural history forays.

At the weekend however Belinda needed to do some shopping and delivery to her ill sister in Stowmarket so I negotiated a drop off at Combs Wood on the edge of town. The display of Early Purple Orchids here is the best I know of for variety with loads of interesting pale specimens but sadly still no pure 'alba' for me! The wood also had singing Garden Warbler and my first Wood Sedge before I turned my attentions to a circular walk out of the back of the wood towards Badley church. Passing the small wood of Fir Covert the unmistakeable song of a Nightingale in full cry was really a sound to make the skin tingle. Around the walk on verges and a large patch of arable set-aside revealed plenty of botanical interest with Phacelia, Wild Radish, Crosswort, Wintercress, Yellow Archangel, Prickly Sow Thistle, Smooth Sow Thistle, Meadow Saxifrage, Red Campion, White Campion, Common Sorrel and Scentless Mayweed. 3 Lesser Whitethroats and several Common Whitethroats were also heard/seen on the walk. St Marks Flies were an annoying distraction as ever!

My apocolist has moved on to the heady heights of 46 at the time of writing with:

No.41 - House Martin
No.42 - Lesser Whitethroat
No.43 - Swallow
No.44 - Common Whitethroat
No.45 - Yellowhammer
No.46 - Swift 

As an aside it seems that Pulham Market has had a visit from #therebelbotanist (scroll down...)  ;-)












Early Purple Orchids

Common Sorrel

Crosswort

Meadow Saxifrage

Phacelia

Prickly Sow Thistle

Scentless Mayweed

Smooth Sow Thistle

St Marks Fly

Wild Radish (curious purple form)

Wintercress

#therebelbotanist

  #therebelbotanist

      #therebelbotanist